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Blood thinning drug does not help patients recover from Covid

A UK-wide trial, led by Addenbrooke’s and the University of Cambridge, has found that a blood thinning drug does not help patients recovering from moderate and severe Covid – despite this approach being offered to patients.

WATCH: Professor Charlotte Summers explains the first results from HEAL-COVID

Link: https://youtu.be/KR0DBVOu2Qs

Video transcript

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So this result from the HEAL-Covid

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trial today,

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shows that the widely-believed-to-work

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therapy, blood thinners,

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so the anticoagulant apixaban

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does not work.

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It does not reduce

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the number of people dying

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and being re-admitted to hospital

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in the 12 months

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after they leave hospital

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from their initial admission from Covid.

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This is important,

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because as well as knowing

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what therapies do work,

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we need to know what therapies don't work

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because all therapies have side effects,

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and in the particular circumstances

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of blood thinners,

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actually bleeding

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is a really serious side effect.

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Giving people therapies

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for which there are side effects

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but no benefit,

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is something that we need to stop doing,

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soo this is a practice-changing

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result from HEAL-Covid.

The HEAL-COVID trial (opens in a new tab) (Helping to Alleviate the Longer-term consequences of Covid-19) is funded by the National Institute for Health and Care Research (NIHR) and the Cambridge NIHR Biomedical Research Centre.

To date, more than a thousand NHS patients hospitalised with Covid have taken part in HEAL-COVID, a platform trial that is aiming to find treatments to reduce the number who die or are readmitted following their time in hospital.

In these first results from HEAL-COVID, it’s been shown that prescribing the oral anticoagulant Apixaban does not stop Covid patients from later dying or being readmitted to hospital over the following year (Apixaban 29.1%, versus standard care 30.8%).

Apixaban
Apixaban is an anticoagulant used to prevent blood clots

As well as not being beneficial, anticoagulant therapy has known serious side effects, and these were experienced by participants in the trial with a small number of the 402 participants receiving Apixaban having major bleeding that required them to discontinue the treatment.

There was also no benefit from Apixaban in terms of the number of days alive and out of hospital at day 60 after randomisation (Apixaban 59 days, versus standard care 59 days).

There is an urgent need for us to find treatments that prevent this significant burden of illness and improve the lives of so many still being affected by Covid.

Professor Charlotte Summers

Chief Investigator for the trial Prof Charlotte Summers is an intensive care specialist at Addenbrooke’s Hospital and the University of Cambridge. She said:

"Having survived the ordeal of being hospitalised with Covid-19, far too many patients find themselves back in hospital, often developing longer-term complications as a result of the virus.

“These first findings from HEAL-COVID show us that a blood thinning drug, commonly thought to be a useful intervention in the post-hospital phase is actually ineffective at stopping people dying or being readmitted to hospital.

"This finding is important because it will prevent unnecessary harm occurring to people for no benefit. It also means we must continue our search for therapies that improve longer term recovery for this devastating disease.”

Covid ICU
CUH Covid intensive care unit during January 2021

Our hope is that these results will stop this drug being needlessly prescribed to patients with Covid-19 and we can change medical practise.

Dr Mark Toshner

Dr Mark Toshner, joint Chief Investigator for HEAL-COVID said:

“Up until now it’s been assumed that Apixaban helps patients recover after severe Covid-19 and that thinning their blood to prevent clots is beneficial. This trial is the first robust evidence that longer anticoagulation after acute Covid-19 puts patients at risk for no clear benefit.

“Finding out that a treatment doesn’t work is really important. It’s not the solution many hoped it would be, with our results highlighting once again why testing treatments in randomised trials is important.”

“At present, the world’s research efforts have focussed on acute Covid-19. We now urgently need evidence about how to best treat patients beyond their initial infection.”

Magnified image of a Coronavirus molecule structure
Imaging of SARS-CoV-2

Research into Covid-19 recovery remains vital as we move out of the pandemic.

Professor Nick Lemoine

Professor Nick Lemoine, NIHR Clinical Research Network Medical Director, said:

"Results such as these from the HEAL-COVID study, help to strengthen our knowledge of how patients can be treated following their stay in hospital and how recovery rates can be improved upon.

“Findings from clinical trials, whether they identify new treatments or rule out methods of care, are vital and rigorous evidence when it comes to changing best medical practice.”

Following these results, the trial will continue to test another drug called Atorvastatin, a widely used lipid lowering drug (‘a statin’) that acts on other mechanisms of disease that are thought to be important in Covid.

The trial is being led by Cambridge University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust (CUH) and University of Cambridge, in collaboration with Liverpool Clinical Trials Centre (University of Liverpool) and Aparito Limited.

HEAL-COVID enrols patients when they are discharged from hospital, following their first admission for Covid-19. They are randomised to a treatment and their progress tracked.

More information about HEAL-COVID here (opens in a new tab).